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Dinning Philip G - - 2012
Background: The rabbit colon consists of 4 distinct regions. The motility of each region is controlled by myogenic and neurogenic mechanisms. Associating these mechanisms with specific motor patterns throughout all regions of the colon has not previously been achieved. Methods: Three sections of the colon: the proximal, mid and distal ...
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Suply Etienne - - 2012
Background & Aims: Postnatal changes in the enteric nervous system (ENS) are involved in the establishment of colonic motility. In adult rats, butyrate induced neuroplastic changes in the ENS leading to enhanced colonic motility. Whether butyrate can induce similar changes during the postnatal period remains unknown. Methods: Enemas (Na-butyrate) were ...
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Capetillo-Zarate Estibaliz - - 2012
Background: β-Amyloid (Aβ) plaques are a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and multiple lines of evidence have linked Aβ with AD. However, synapse loss is known as the best pathological correlate of cognitive impairment in AD, and intraneuronal Aβ accumulation has been shown to precede plaque pathology. The progression ...
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Moon Minho - - 2012
One of the major hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the extracellular deposition of amyloid-β (Aβ) as senile plaques in specific brain regions. Clearly, an understanding of the cellular processes underlying Aβ deposition is a crucial issue in the field of AD research. Recent studies have found that accumulation of ...
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Ahn D K - - 2012
The response properties of tooth pulp neurons that respond to noxious thermal stimulation of the dental pulp have been not well-studied. The present study was designed to characterize the response properties of tooth pulp neurons to noxious thermal stimulation of the dental pulp. Experiments were conducted on 25 male ferrets, ...
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Cipriani Sara - - 2012
Urate is a major antioxidant as well as the enzymatic end product of purine metabolism in humans. Higher levels correlate with a reduced risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD) and with a slower rate of PD progression. In this study we investigated the effects of modulating intracellular urate concentration on ...
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Markowitz David A - - 2011
The successful development of motor neuroprosthetic devices hinges on the ability to accurately and reliably decode signals from the brain. Motor neuroprostheses are widely investigated in behaving non-human primates, but technical constraints have limited progress in optimizing performance. In particular, the organization of movement-related neuronal activity across cortical layers remains ...
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Darvesh Sultan - - 2011
ABSTRACT: Histochemical analysis of Alzheimer disease (AD) brain tissues indicates that butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) is present in β-amyloid (Aβ) plaques. The role of BuChE in AD pathology is unknown, but an animal model developing similar BuChE-associated Aβ plaques could provide insights. The APPSWE/PSEN1dE9 transgenic mouse (ADTg), which develops Aβ plaques, was ...
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Wu Di - - 2011
Recent observations have demonstrated that nanomaterials may be toxic to human tissue. While the ability of nano-scaled particulate matter is known to cause a range of problems in respiratory system, recent observations suggest that the nervous system may be vulnerable as well. In the current paper we asked whether exposure ...
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King Chih H - - 2011
Kv7 (KCNQ) potassium channel openers (enhancers) decrease neuropathic pain in experimental models. Here we show that C-fibers, and their associated small diameter neurons in the dorsal root ganglia (both IB4- and TrkA-positive), express Kv7.5. In contrast, C-fibers did not express detectable levels of Kv7.2 or Kv7.3, which are instead localized ...
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Barbaresi Paolo - - 2011
The pattern of distribution and co-localization of the calcium binding protein calretinin (Cal) and of enzymes producing nitric oxide (NO) was examined in the rat periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) using two different experimental approaches, by combining Cal immunocytochemistry with NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemistry and with NOS immunocytochemistry, respectively. Cal-immunopositive neurons were ...
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Theys Tom - - 2011
The macaque Anterior Intraparietal area (AIP) is crucial for visually-guided grasping. AIP neurons respond during the visual presentation of real-world objects and encode the depth profile of disparity-defined curved surfaces. We investigated the neural representation of curved surfaces in AIP using a stimulus-reduction approach. The stimuli consisted of three-dimensional shapes ...
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Sanchez-Varo Raquel - - 2011
Dystrophic neurites associated with amyloid plaques precede neuronal death and manifest early in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In this work we have characterized the plaque-associated neuritic pathology in the hippocampus of young (4- to 6-month-old) PS1(M146L)/APP(751SL) mice model, as the initial degenerative process underlying functional disturbance prior to neuronal loss. Neuritic ...
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Conzelmann Markus - - 2011
Cilia-based locomotion is the major form of locomotion for microscopic planktonic organisms in the ocean. Given their negative buoyancy, these organisms must control ciliary activity to maintain an appropriate depth. The neuronal bases of depth regulation in ciliary swimmers are unknown. To gain insights into depth regulation we studied ciliary ...
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Bagale Sharanappa M - - 2011
Serotonin is a monoamine serving as a chemical messenger in diverse brain regions, as well as in blood and various other organs. We synthesized six ethylamine functionalized fluorophores as fluorescent probes for serotonin. The one with best spectral properties and aqueous solubility, 6-amino-2-(2-aminoethyl)-1H-benzo[de]isoquinoline-1,3(2H)-dione, was studied in detail both in vivo ...
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Fan Ni - - 2011
Chronic compression (CCD) of the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) is a model of human radicular pain produced by intraforaminal stenosis and other disorders affecting the DRG, spinal nerve or root. Previously we examined electrophysiological changes in small-diameter L3 and L4 DRG neurons treated with CCD; the present study extends these ...
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Darocha-Souto B - - 2011
β-Amyloid (Aβ) plaques in Alzheimer (AD) brains are surrounded by severe dendritic and axonal changes, including local spine loss, axonal swellings and distorted neurite trajectories. Whether and how plaques induce these neuropil abnormalities remains unknown. We tested the hypothesis that oligomeric assemblies of Aβ, seen in the periphery of plaques, ...
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Christianson G Björn - - 2011
The computational role of cortical layers within auditory cortex has proven difficult to establish. One hypothesis is that interlaminar cortical processing might be dedicated to analyzing temporal properties of sounds; if so, then there should be systematic depth-dependent changes in cortical sensitivity to the temporal context in which a stimulus ...
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Greene Adrienne C - - 2011
Chemical and topographical cues can be used to guide dissociated neurons into user-defined network geometries on artificial substrates, yet control of neuron polarity (differentiation into axons and dendrites) remains an elusive goal. We developed a dual guidance cue strategy for directing morphological maturity in neurons in vitro using combined chemical and ...
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Duong Thang - - 2011
Exposure to specific visual stimuli causes a reduction in sensitivity to similar subsequent stimulation. This adaptation effect is observed behaviorally and for neurons in the primary visual cortex. Here, we explore the effects of adaptation on neurons that encode binocular depth discrimination in the cat's primary visual cortex. Our results ...
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Nowak R - - 2011
The onset of maternal responsiveness and the development of mother-young attachment in sheep are under the combined influence of hormonal and sensory stimulations. In the mother, the prepartum rise in estrogen and vaginocervical stimulation caused by expulsion of the fetus act on the main olfactory system and on hypothalamic regions. ...
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Smith Joel - - 2011
What gives an organism the ability to regrow tissues and to recover function where another organism fails is the central problem of regenerative biology. The challenge is to describe the mechanisms of regeneration at the molecular level, delivering detailed insights into the many components that are cross-regulated. In other words, ...
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Druckmann Shaul - - 2011
The rich dynamical nature of neurons poses major conceptual and technical challenges for unraveling their nonlinear membrane properties. Traditionally, various current waveforms have been injected at the soma to probe neuron dynamics, but the rationale for selecting specific stimuli has never been rigorously justified. The present experimental and theoretical study ...
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Ruther Patrick - - 2011
This paper reports on a compact, small-scale neural recording system combining state-of-art silicon-based probe arrays with a light-weight 32-channel wireless head stage. The system is equipped with two- and four-shaft, comb-shaped probe arrays connected to highly flexible ribbon cables enabling a reliable and controlled insertion of probe arrays through the ...
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Gaunt Robert A - - 2011
Non-penetrating surface electrode recording techniques are typically associated with field potential recordings, while extracellular recordings from single neurons are made using penetrating metal wire or microfabricated microelectrode arrays. Here, we report on single- and multi-unit neuronal recordings made using non-penetrating electrodes placed on the epineural surface of the dorsal root ...
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Lee Yee-Shuan - - 2011
Neural tissue engineering may be a promising option for neural repair treatment, for which a well-designed scaffold is essential. Smart materials that can stimulate neurite extension and outgrowth have been investigated as potential scaffolding materials. A piezoelectric polymer polyvinylidene fluoride-trifluoroethylene (PVDF-TrFE) was used to fabricate electrospun aligned and random scaffolds ...
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Lamy Christophe M - - 2011
Changes in intracellular Na(+) concentration underlie essential neurobiological processes, but few reliable tools exist for their measurement. Here we characterize a new synthetic Na(+)-sensitive fluorescent dye, Asante Natrium Green (ANG), with unique properties. This indicator was excitable in the visible spectrum and by two-photon illumination, suffered little photobleaching and located ...
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Grimsley Jasmine Marion S - - 2011
Multielectrode arrays were used to compare responses to tooth chatter and purr calls from all eight areas of the auditory cortex in anaesthetized guinea pigs. These calls have different behavioural contexts: males emit tooth chatters in aggressive encounters and the purr call during courtship behaviour. Of the two core areas, ...
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Sharpee Tatyana O - - 2011
Understanding the neural mechanisms of invariant object recognition remains one of the major unsolved problems in neuroscience. A common solution that is thought to be employed by diverse sensory systems is to create hierarchical representations of increasing complexity and tolerance. However, in the mammalian auditory system many aspects of this ...
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Lee Yu-Tao - - 2011
Electrodes on planar type microelectromechanical system (MEMS) microprobes mainly record neurons on the top-side of probe shaft (called a top-side electrode). However, it is often necessary to record neurons other than those on the top-side of the probe shaft. This study uses the glass reflowing technique to embed silicon-vias in ...
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McCarthy P T - - 2011
Direct recording from sequential processing stations within the brain has provided opportunity for enhancing understanding of important neural circuits, such as the corticothalamic loops underlying auditory, visual, and somatosensory processing. However, the common reliance upon microwire-based electrodes to perform such recordings often necessitates complex surgeries and increases trauma to neural ...
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Mechler Ferenc - - 2011
The recording radius and spatial selectivity of an extracellular probe is important for interpreting neurophysiological recordings, but is rarely measured. Moreover, an analysis of the recording biophysics of multisite probes (e.g., tetrodes) can provide for source characterization and localization of spiking single units, but this capability has remained largely unexploited. ...
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Ma Tong-Hui - - 2011
The expression and role of the aquaporin (AQP) family water channels in the peripheral nervous system was less investigated. Since 2004, however, significant progress has been made in the immunolocalization, regulation and function of AQPs in the peripheral nervous system. These studies showed selective localization of three AQPs (AQP1, AQP2, ...
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Santagata Scott - - 2011
Recent structural analyses of invertebrate nervous systems have supported hypotheses stating that specific developmental and cytological aspects of larval and adult brains are conserved among bilaterian animals. Opposing views argue that structural similarities in larval nervous systems may be the result of convergent evolution and that the developmental diversity of ...
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Shikanai Mima - - 2011
During cerebral cortical development, post-mitotic neurons exhibit a multi-step migration. The locomotion mode covers most of the neuronal migration path. Although for many decades, locomoting neurons have been known to migrate along radial glial fibers, how the cortical locomoting neurons attach to and migrate along radial glial fibers was largely ...
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Horner Vanessa L - - 2011
In the embryonic neural tube, multiple signaling pathways work in concert to create functional neuronal circuits in the adult spinal cord. In the ventral neural tube, Sonic hedgehog (Shh) acts as a graded morphogen to specify neurons necessary for movement. In the dorsal neural tube, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and ...
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Stottmann Rolf W - - 2011
Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) activity has been implicated as a key regulator of multiple aspects of dorsal neural tube development. BMP signaling in the dorsal-most neuroepithelial cells presumably plays a critical role. We use tissue-specific gene ablation to probe the roles of BMPR1A, the type 1 BMP receptor that is ...
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Yu Minrui - - 2011
In many neural culture studies, neurite migration on a flat, open surface does not reflect the three-dimensional (3D) microenvironment in vivo. With that in mind, we fabricated arrays of semiconductor tubes using strained silicon (Si) and germanium (Ge) nanomembranes and employed them as a cell culture substrate for primary cortical ...
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Tomita Minoru - - 2011
Coupling between capillary red blood cell (RBC) movements and neuronal dysfunction during cortical spreading depression (CSD) was examined in rats by employing a high-speed camera laser-scanning confocal fluorescence microscope system in conjunction with our Matlab domain software (KEIO-IS2). Following microinjection of K(+) onto the surface of the brain, changes in ...
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Intrasulcal electrocorticography in macaque monkeys with minimally invasive neurosurgical protocols.
Matsuo Takeshi - - 2011
Electrocorticography (ECoG), multichannel brain-surface recording and stimulation with probe electrode arrays, has become a potent methodology not only for clinical neurosurgery but also for basic neuroscience using animal models. The highly evolved primate's brain has deep cerebral sulci, and both gyral and intrasulcal cortical regions have been implicated in important ...
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Lindå Hans - - 2011
Activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) is induced in various tissues in response to stress. In this experiment, ATF3 expression was studied in adult rats subjected either to a dorsal or ventral root avulsion (VRA; L4-6), or sciatic nerve transection (SNT). Post-operative survival times varied between 1.5 h and 3 weeks. In additional ...
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Valley Matthew - - 2011
Standard slice electrophysiology has allowed researchers to probe individual components of neural circuitry by recording electrical responses of single cells in response to electrical or pharmacological manipulations(1,2). With the invention of methods to optically control genetically targeted neurons (optogenetics), researchers now have an unprecedented level of control over specific groups ...
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Schjetnan Andrea Gomez Palacio - - 2011
Large scale electrophysiological recordings from neuronal ensembles offer the opportunity to investigate how the brain orchestrates the wide variety of behaviors from the spiking activity of its neurons. One of the most effective methods to monitor spiking activity from a large number of neurons in multiple local neuronal circuits simultaneously ...
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Smit-Rigter Laura A - - 2011
In various species and areas of the cerebral cortex, apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons form clusters which extend through several layers of the cortex also known as dendritic bundles. Previously, it has been shown that 5-HT(3A) receptor knockout mice show hypercomplex apical dendrites of cortical layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons, together ...
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Goll Johanna C - - 2010
Analysis of the auditory environment, source identification and vocal communication all require efficient brain mechanisms for disambiguating, representing and understanding complex natural sounds as 'auditory objects'. Failure of these mechanisms leads to a diverse spectrum of clinical deficits. Here we review current evidence concerning the phenomenology, mechanisms and brain substrates ...
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Liotti Mario - - 2010
High-density ERPs were recorded in eight adults with persistent developmental stuttering (PERS) and eight matched normally fluent (CONT) control volunteers while participants either repeatedly uttered the vowel 'ah' or listened to their own previously recorded vocalizations. The fronto-central N1 auditory wave was reduced in response to spoken vowels relative to ...
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Oviedo Hysell V - - 2010
The primary auditory cortex (A1) is organized tonotopically, with neurons sensitive to high and low frequencies arranged in a rostro-caudal gradient. We used laser scanning photostimulation in acute slices to study the organization of local excitatory connections onto layers 2 and 3 (L2/3) of the mouse A1. Consistent with the ...
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Chen Chi-Ming A - - 2011
How do animals distinguish between sensations coming from external sources and those resulting from their own actions? A corollary discharge system has evolved that involves the transmission of a copy of motor commands to sensory cortex, where the expected sensation is generated. Through this mechanism, sensations are tagged as coming ...
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Pihko Elina - - 2011
To evaluate the possible effect of intervening auditory stimulation on somatosensory evoked magnetic fields in newborns. We recorded auditory and tactile evoked responses with magnetoencephalography (MEG) from two groups of healthy newborns. One group (n=11) received only tactile stimuli to the index finger, the other (n=11) received alternating tactile and ...
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Costa-Faidella Jordi - - 2011
Single neurons in the primary auditory cortex of the cat show faster adaptation time constants to short- than long-term stimulus history. This ability to encode the complex past auditory stimulation in multiple time scales would enable the auditory system to generate expectations of the incoming stimuli. Here, we tested whether ...
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